Scores of books have been written on Walt Disney and the entertainment colossus he created, but author Richard Snow finds some new running room, delivering an elegantly written chronicle focusing on how Disney created and funded the famed park that bears his name in “Disney’s Land: Walt Disney and the Invention of the Amusement Park that Changed the World.”
Disney knew the importance of characters in storytelling and so does Snow, examining many of the people who helped Disney on his passage from idea to game-changing park.
One such character is Buzz Price, who completed early research on the economic feasibility of Disney’s park. A jogger, Price had tabulated the distance of every run and the costs of socks, shoes and other expenses to get his per-mile running cost.
Price was the right man for the Disneyland feasibility job.
Snow also thoroughly explores Disney’s older brother Roy’s role in the creation of Disneyland. “Walt … was the creative one,” he writes. “But he could not have brought forth his creations without Roy’s business acumen.”